It’s time for the community to determine the winner of the Superuser Award to be presented at the OpenStack Austin Summit. Based on the nominations received, the Superuser Editorial Advisory Board conducted the first round of judging and narrowed the pool to four finalists.

Now, it’s your turn.

The team from AT&T is one of the four finalists. Review the nomination criteria below, check out the other nominees and cast your vote before the deadline, Friday, April 8 at 11:59 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time. Voting is limited to one ballot per person.

How has OpenStack transformed your business?

AT&T is a legacy telco which is transforming itself by adopting virtual infrastructure and a software defined networking focus in order to compete in the market and create value for customers in the next five years and beyond.

Virtualization and virtual network functions (VNFs) are of critical importance to the Telecom industry to address growth and agility. AT&T’s Domain 2.0 Industry Whitepaper released in 2013 outlines the need as well as direction.

AT&T chose OpenStack as the core foundation of their cloud and virtualization strategy

OpenStack has reinforced AT&T’s open source strategy and strengthened our dedication to the community as we actively promote and invest resources in OpenStack

AT&T is committing staff and resources to drive the vision and innovation in the OpenStack and OPNFV communities to help drive OpenStack as the default cloud orchestrator for the Telecom industry

AT&T as a founding member of the ETSI ISG network functions virtualization (NFV) helped drive OpenStack as the cloud orchestrator in the NFV platform framework. OpenStack was positioned as the VIM – Virtual Infrastructure Manager. This accelerated the convergence of the Telco industry onto OpenStack.

OpenStack serves as a critical foundation for AT&T’s software-defined networking (SDN) and NFV future and we take pride in the following:

AT&T has deployed 70+ OpenStack (Juno & Kilo based) clouds globally, which are currently operational. Of the 70+ clouds 57 are production application and network clouds.

AT&T plans 90% growth, going to 100+ production application and network clouds by the end of 2016.

AT&T connects more than 14 million wireless customers via virtualized networks, with significant subscriber cut-over planned again in 2016

AT&T controls 5.7% of our network resources (29 Telco production grade VNFs) with OpenStack, with plans to reach 30% by the end of 2016 and 75% by 2020.

AT&T trained more than 100 staff in OpenStack in 2015

AT&T plans to expand to expand its community team of 50+ employees in 2016 As the chosen cloud platform OpenStack enabled AT&T in the following SDN and NFV related initiatives:

Our recently announced 5G field trials in Austin

Re-launch of unlimited data to mobility customers

Launch of AT&T Collaborate a next generation communication tool for enterprise

Provisioning of a Network on Demand platform to more than 500 enterprise customers

Connected Car and MVNO (Mobile Virtual Network Operator)

Mobile Call Recording

Internally we are virtualizing our control services like DNS, NAT, NTP, DHCP, radius, firewalls, load balancers and probes for fault and performance management.

Since 2012, AT&T has developed all of our significant new applications in a cloud native fashion hosted on OpenStack. We also architected OpenStack to support legacy apps.

OpenStack currently resides on over 15,000 VMs worldwide, with the expectation of further, significant growth coming in 2016-17

AT&T’s OpenStack integrated Orchestration framework has resulted in a 75% reduction in turnaround time for requests for virtual resources

AT&T Plans to move 80% of our Legacy IT into the OpenStack based virtualized cloud environment within coming years

Uniform set of APIs exposed by OpenStack allows AT&T business units to leverage a "develop-once-run-everywhere" set of tools OpenStack helps AT&T’s strategy to begin to adopt best of the breed solutions at five 9’s of reliability for:

NFV

Internet-scale storage service

SDN

Putting all AT&T’s workloads on one common platform Deployment Automation: OpenStack modules have enabled AT&T to cost-effectively manage the OpenStack configuration in an automated, holistic fashion.

Using OpenStack Heat, AT&T pushed rolling updates and incremental changes across 70+ OpenStack clouds. Doing it manually would be take many more people and a much longer schedule.

Using OpenStack Fuel as a pivotal component in its cloud deployments AT&T accelerates the otherwise consuming, complex, and error-prone process of deploying, testing, and maintaining various configuration flavors of OpenStack at scale. AT&T was a major contributor towards Fuel 7.0 and Fuel 8.0 requirements. OpenStack has been a pivotal driver of AT&T’s overall culture shift. AT&T as an organization is in the midst of a massive culture shift from a Legacy Telco to a company where new skills, techniques and solutions are embraced.

OpenStack has been a key driver of this transformation in the following ways:

AT&T is now building 50 percent of all software on open source technologies

Allowing for the adoption of a dev ops model that creates a more unified team working towards a better end product

Development transitioned from a waterfall to cloud-native CICD methodologies

Developers continue to support OpenStack and make their applications cloud-native whenever possible.

How has the organization participated in or contributed to the OpenStack community?

AT&T was the first U.S. telecom service provider to sign up for and adopt the then early stage NASA-spawned OpenStack cloud initiative, back in 2011.

AT&T has been an active OpenStack contributor since the Bexar release.

AT&T has been a Platinum Member of the OpenStack Foundation since its origins in 2012 after helping to create its bylaws.

Toby Ford, AVP AT&T Cloud Technology has provided vision, technology leadership, and innovation to OpenStack ecosystem as an OpenStack Foundation board member since late 2012.

AT&T is founding member of ETSI, and OPNFV.

AT&T has invested in building an OpenStack upstream contribution team with 25 current employees and a target for 50+ employees by the end of 2016.

During the early years of OpenStack, AT&T brought many important use-cases to the community. AT&T worked towards solving those use-cases by leveraging various OpenStack modules, in turn encouraging other enterprises to have confidence in the young ecosystem.

AT&T drove these following Telco-grade blueprint contributions to past releases of OpenStack:

AT&T is proud to drive OpenStack adoption by sharing knowledge back to the OpenStack community in the form of these summit sessions at the upcoming Austin summit:

Telco Cloud Requirements: What VNFs Are Asking For

Using a Service VM as an IPv6 vRouter

Service Function Chaining

Technology Analysis Perspective

Deploying Lots of Teeny Tiny Telco Clouds

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about OpenStack At Scale

Valet: Holistic Data Center Optimization for OpenStack

Gluon: An Enabler for NFV

Among the Cloud: Open Source NFV + SDN Deployment

AT&T: Driving Enterprise Workloads on KVM and vCenter using OpenStack as the Unified Control Plane

Striving for High-Performance NFV Grid on OpenStack. Why you, and every OpenStack community member should be excited about it

OpenStack at Carrier Scale

AT&T is the "first to market" with deployment of OpenStack supported carrier-grade Virtual Network Functions. We provide the community with integral data, information, and first-hand knowledge on the trials and tribulations experienced deploying NFV technology.

AT&T ranks in the top 20 percent of all companies in terms of upstream contribution (code, documentation, blueprints), with plans to increase this significantly in 2016.

Commits: 1200+

Lines of Code: 116,566

Change Requests: 618

Patch Sets: 1490

Draft Blueprints: 76

Completed Blueprints: 30

Filed Bugs: 350

Resolved Bugs: 250

What is the scale of the OpenStack deployment?

AT&T’s OpenStack based AIC is deployed at 70+ sites across the world. Of the 70+ 57 are production app and network clouds.

AT&T plans 90% growth, going to 100+ production app and network clouds by end of 2016.

AT&T connects more than 14 million of the 134.5 million wireless customers via virtualized networks with significant subscriber cutover planned again in 2016

AT&T controls 5.7% of our network resources (29 Telco production grade VNF) with a goal of high 80s by end of 2016) on OpenStack.

Production workloads also include AT&T’s Connected Car, Network on Demand, and AT&T Collaborate among many more.

How is this team innovating with OpenStack?

AT&T and AT&T Labs are leveraging OpenStack to innovate with Containers and NFV technology.

Containers are a key part of AT&Ts Cloud Native Architecture. AT&T chairs the Open Container Initiative (OCI) to drive the standardization around container formats.

AT&T is leading the effort to improve Nova and Neutron’s interface to SDN controllers.

Margaret Chiosi, an early design collaborator to Neutron, ETSI NFV, now serves as President of OPNFV. AT&T is utilizing its position with OPNFV to help shape the future of OpenStack / NFV. OpenStack has enabled AT&T to innovate extensively.

The following recent unique workloads would not be possible without the SDN and NFV capabilities which OpenStack enables:

Our recent announcements of 5G field trials in Austin

Re-launch of unlimited data to mobility customers

Launch of AT&T Collaborate

Network on Demand platform to more than 500 enterprise customers

Connected Car and MVNO (Mobile Virtual Network Operator)

Mobile Call Recording New services by AT&T Entertainment Group (DirecTV) that would use OpenStack based cloud infrastructure in coming years:

NFL Sunday Ticket with up to 8 simultaneous games

DirecTV Streaming Service Without Need For satellite dish

In summary – the innovation with OpenStack is not just our unique workloads, but also to support them together under the same framework, management systems, development/test, CI/CD pipelines, and deployment automation toolset(s).